Abstract

Hysteresis of the baroreflex (BR) is the result of the different BR sensitivity (BRS) when arterial pressure (AP) rises or falls. This phenomenon has been poorly studied and almost exclusively examined by applying pharmacological challenges and static approaches disregarding causal relations. This study inspects the asymmetry of the cardiac BR (cBR) and vascular sympathetic BR (sBR) in physiological closed loop conditions from spontaneous fluctuations of physiological variables, namely heart period (HP) and systolic AP (SAP) leading to the estimation of cardiac BRS (cBRS) and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) and diastolic AP (DAP) leading to the estimation of vascular sympathetic BRS (sBRS). The assessment was carried out in 12 young healthy subjects undergoing incremental head-up tilt with table inclination gradually increased from 0 to 60°. Two analytical methods were exploited and compared, namely the sequence (SEQ) and phase-rectified signal averaging (PRSA) methods. SEQ analysis is based on the detection of joint causal schemes representing the HP and MSNA burst rate delayed responses to spontaneous SAP and DAP modifications, respectively. PRSA analysis averages HP and MSNA burst rate patterns after aligning them according to the direction of SAP and DAP changes, respectively. Since cBRSs were similar when SAP went up or down, hysteresis of cBR was not detected. Conversely, hysteresis of sBR was evident with sBRS more negative when DAP was falling than rising. sBR hysteresis was no longer visible during sympathetic activation induced by the orthostatic challenge. These results were obtained via the SEQ method, while the PRSA technique appeared to be less powerful in describing the BR asymmetry due to the strong association between BRS estimates computed over positive and negative AP variations. This study suggests that cBR and sBR provide different information about the BR control, sBR exhibits more relevant non-linear features that are evident even during physiological changes of AP, and the SEQ method can be fruitfully exploited to characterize the BR hysteresis with promising applications to BR branches different from cBR and sBR.

Highlights

  • The baroreflex (BR) can be seen as a composite reflex formed by several arms simultaneously adjusting multiple physiological variables in response to the same arterial pressure (AP) variation

  • diastolic AP (DAP) change in Figures 1A–F, respectively. Cardiac BRS (cBRS) and sympathetic BRS (sBRS) are estimated via SEQ (Figures 1A,D), phase-rectified signal averaging (PRSA) (Figures 1B,E), and normalized version of the original PRSA method (nPRSA) (Figures 1C,F) techniques

  • We recommend the use of the SEQ method for future studies on the BR hysteresis given that this approach is much more powerful than the PRSA technique in typifying the different responses of BR arms to positive and negative AP spontaneous changes

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Summary

Introduction

The baroreflex (BR) can be seen as a composite reflex formed by several arms simultaneously adjusting multiple physiological variables in response to the same arterial pressure (AP) variation. Among these branches the cardiac BR (cBR) and the vascular sympathetic BR (sBR) react to AP changes, respectively, with parallel variations of heart period (HP) (Smyth et al, 1969; Pickering et al, 1972) and antiparallel variations of sympathetic nerve activity. SBRS is negative given that the amplitude (or area) and the likelihood of the occurrence of the MSNA burst increase in response to DAP drops and they rise when DAP decreases

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